I think the impulse solution is the more realistic one. My assumptions here are that all jumpers are equal. If you took an energy (work on car model) for the solution it would make no sense. If all jumpers are equal and they apply a force F on the car for the same duration of time (which makes sense no matter how how fast the car goes or what its mass was) because the jumpers are standing on the car anyways.. then they all apply the same amount of impulse on the car leading to the solution mentioned in post #10! But I still have problems applying the laws to this case. Let's say they all put in the same amount of kinetic energy onto the car which would make sense since they all have the same power etc. if they jumped off one by one it meant that for the second jumper the car would already move faster than for the first jumper. Now if every jumper applied the same amount of force onto the car during the same amount of time (which we sort of agreed on stating that all jumpers are equal) - Like if the energy put on the car was given by the force of the jumper during a way which way would that be- the way the jumpers legs bend or the distance the car would have taken during the process of jumping and applying the force? because the distance the car would have taken would differ from jumper to jumper if they jumped off the car one after another... which would in return mean they all applied a different amount of kinetic energy to the car... which we agreed upon on they wouldn't because why would they given that they were equal. Also the outcome of a given experiment in thought must not differ in dependence on which method of calculation is being used right? Since this would undermine the integrity of the scientific value of any given prediction.
@Ben2 I don't know how you came to that solution but given
@A.T. 3d post post #10 in this thread the only time it doesn't make a difference if they jumped off together or not is when the mass of the car was 0 and the equations are no longer properly defined!
So i try to make different kind of solutions each leading to the same outcome of course starting with the forces- each jumper putting the same amount of force for the same amount of time onto the remaining system.
Assumptions: mass car=10kg, mass jumper=1kg, mass jumper 2=1 kg mass jumper3=1 kg, F(Jumper)=10N (1kg*10(m/s²) jumping duration (Duration during which force is implied on remaining system) = 1s; velocity of car at tha start of teh experiment=0
Case 1 - jump one after another:F(jumper)=F(Remain)
F(jumper)*t=F(Remain)*t
m(jumper)*a(j)*t=m(Remain)+a(R)*t
1kg*10m/s²*1s=12kg*a*1s
a=10/12 m/s² - ergo - speed after jumper 1 is 10/12m/s F(jumper)/(mass of Ra
F(jumper2)=F(Remain)
(...)
1kg*10m/s²*1s=11kg*a*1sok kinda lost interest into writing this down... however if they all jumped together at the end of the day their relative speed to each other would be 0 (the relative spped of one jumper to another) - if they jumped one after another then jumper 2 would move relative to jumper 1 and jumper 3 would move relative to jumper 2 (and to a greater extent to jumper 1)... its a matter of distribution really -if they jumped off at different times with the same force applied for the same time theyd reach the same impulse relative to the car but not relative to another reference system. Some of the impulse of jumper1 on would be used to move jumper 2 and 3 thus lacking in the spped of the car in the final result...
if the all jumped together the total force applied on the car would be (F(j1)+F(j2)+F(j3)=30N - but if they jumped one after each other the total force applied on the car would be F(j1)*m(car)/(m(car)+m(j2)+m(j3))+F(j2)*(m(car)/(m(car)+m(j3))+F(j3)*(m(car)/m(car) which is obv. less and becomes lesser and lesser the bigger the masses of the jumpers are.
If you put it down with energies.. the result would be exactly the same... note that this is just the equivalent of A.T.'s post on page 1... you could show that if one used energies instead of forces... because the kinetic energy "applied" on the car would be the same for each jumper if their weight, force (used during jump) and jump time would be the same... the energy applied or the work done during jump must equal the kinetic energy of the car after the jump. the way along which the force is applied would be the direction of the jump and its length would be the dependent on the length of the legs of the jumpers for example. It wouldn't even matter if they were of different height because given they apply the same force for the jump and take the same amount of time to do so one could argue that if they were of different size one would bent their knee less than the other on so forth but I don't think one should engage in such figurative ways when approaching a rather simple physical problem!
Lg Don
Summary: A.T. s post on page one solved the problem fairly easy.